Well I have finally completed my PPCT Instructor Course and am now a certified instructor:headbangin:. I have my opinions listed below but could you tell me what you feel about PPCT and the results of using it in a situation (and the details of the situation)?
I went in with the attitude of this is a poor system designed for administrations that are more worried about lawsuits against the department than for the safety of their officers.
This is what I myself got out of it and is personal opinion only:
-The pressure point instruction was better than I thought and useful to passive persons you just need to understand that trying pain compliance in a fight is the wrong thing to do in most situations (possibly as a distraction) as in a real fight.
-The handcuffing was awkward and went against the concept of easy to learn and retain; FBI and Krav are simpler, faster and just as solid (i.e. better).
-The mechanics of the striking techniques are solid but the lack of use, practice, emphasis and range (types of hand striking) made them feel like "when all else fails, you might try this."
-Their version of the elbow strike makes the elbow strike less useful... but at least they have it.
-Their takedowns and arm locks are like the striking; at least they have something. They dont even teach a seperate wristlock, which was a let down.
-Their angle kick is solid and they teach the common peroneal and the femoral as target points so plus one for this (simpler to use the way it is taught and has an extra target area taught over FBI Arrest Control).
-Their thrust kick is weak and targets a small area (superficial peroneal). This could easily be a low front snap kick (which it "kind of" is) and taught simpler..... but its there.
-There is no back kick and we were told not to try anything like that since there is no power to any type of back kick - that was just lame.
-They have hard outter blocks and decent inside parries... If I could say one thing about this it would be that the hard outside blocks were not taught against low (kick) attacks.
-Movement skills were not taught per se, kind of mentioned as an after thought; like getting off the line of attack, step drags, slide steps and the likes.
-There were no break falls taught or rolling either... this was a disappointment.
-Their stunning techniques were solid and better taught than anything else I have learned from either a LEO school or MA school.
-They have a side choke. I have never seen or used anything like it so it was a technique I will store but probably never use. The FBI AC has the RNC so now I have two options (though both are against policy...:sadsong.
-There is no ground fighting, no kip-ups or anything similar but I did learn that the company behind PPCT teachs a separate system called GAGE and looks like it would be worth trying to get into but I doubt I can swing that (with my agency paying for it).
-Combos are emphasized and self generating those combos are expected... this is good.
-Mental & physical aspects on combat are taught, this is good.
-Their stuns are good but overemphasized.
-Distraction techniques are covered but, like the foot movement and wrist lock, almost like an afterthought.
-Weapon retention was average but their disarms were a little overly technical.
-It teaches an impact weapon, a baton, just like every other LEO DT program.
The end result was the belief that "this was better than I thought it was going to be."
It has basic punches, knees, elbows (kind of), kicks, blocks and parries. It teaches some of the physcial and mental aspects to high stress (combat) situations and how to alleviate or deal with some of them (stress response) which was really good. Their pain compliance techniques are the best I have seen/used. PPCT just seems like an incomplete system that has emphasis in the wrong areas (at least for police work).
This is my .02 only and I look forward to hearing what others have to say about it and especially people who have used it.
I went in with the attitude of this is a poor system designed for administrations that are more worried about lawsuits against the department than for the safety of their officers.
This is what I myself got out of it and is personal opinion only:
-The pressure point instruction was better than I thought and useful to passive persons you just need to understand that trying pain compliance in a fight is the wrong thing to do in most situations (possibly as a distraction) as in a real fight.
-The handcuffing was awkward and went against the concept of easy to learn and retain; FBI and Krav are simpler, faster and just as solid (i.e. better).
-The mechanics of the striking techniques are solid but the lack of use, practice, emphasis and range (types of hand striking) made them feel like "when all else fails, you might try this."
-Their version of the elbow strike makes the elbow strike less useful... but at least they have it.
-Their takedowns and arm locks are like the striking; at least they have something. They dont even teach a seperate wristlock, which was a let down.
-Their angle kick is solid and they teach the common peroneal and the femoral as target points so plus one for this (simpler to use the way it is taught and has an extra target area taught over FBI Arrest Control).
-Their thrust kick is weak and targets a small area (superficial peroneal). This could easily be a low front snap kick (which it "kind of" is) and taught simpler..... but its there.
-There is no back kick and we were told not to try anything like that since there is no power to any type of back kick - that was just lame.
-They have hard outter blocks and decent inside parries... If I could say one thing about this it would be that the hard outside blocks were not taught against low (kick) attacks.
-Movement skills were not taught per se, kind of mentioned as an after thought; like getting off the line of attack, step drags, slide steps and the likes.
-There were no break falls taught or rolling either... this was a disappointment.
-Their stunning techniques were solid and better taught than anything else I have learned from either a LEO school or MA school.
-They have a side choke. I have never seen or used anything like it so it was a technique I will store but probably never use. The FBI AC has the RNC so now I have two options (though both are against policy...:sadsong.
-There is no ground fighting, no kip-ups or anything similar but I did learn that the company behind PPCT teachs a separate system called GAGE and looks like it would be worth trying to get into but I doubt I can swing that (with my agency paying for it).
-Combos are emphasized and self generating those combos are expected... this is good.
-Mental & physical aspects on combat are taught, this is good.
-Their stuns are good but overemphasized.
-Distraction techniques are covered but, like the foot movement and wrist lock, almost like an afterthought.
-Weapon retention was average but their disarms were a little overly technical.
-It teaches an impact weapon, a baton, just like every other LEO DT program.
The end result was the belief that "this was better than I thought it was going to be."
It has basic punches, knees, elbows (kind of), kicks, blocks and parries. It teaches some of the physcial and mental aspects to high stress (combat) situations and how to alleviate or deal with some of them (stress response) which was really good. Their pain compliance techniques are the best I have seen/used. PPCT just seems like an incomplete system that has emphasis in the wrong areas (at least for police work).
This is my .02 only and I look forward to hearing what others have to say about it and especially people who have used it.